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22 MARINE ST., ST. AUGUSTINE, FL 32084 | (904) 824-2310
GALLERY HOURS: TUE - SUN, 12pm TO 4PM | FREE ADMISSION
22 MARINE ST., ST. AUGUSTINE, FL 32084 | (904) 824-2310

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Showing 33–40 of 64 resultsSorted by latest

  • My Pursuit of Happiness

    My Pursuit of Happiness

    Mixed Media by Pam Wullenweber (24in. x 16in.) ***Not for Sale***
     
    Artwork purchased online can be picked up AFTER the exhibit ends, on or after August 2, 2026 -- or shipped to the buyer (ALL SHIPPING COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE BUYER). 
    Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
  • A Lot Of Ins, A Lot Of Outs....A Lot Of What-Have-Yous

    A Lot Of Ins, A Lot Of Outs….A Lot Of What-Have-Yous

    Analog Collage by Melissa Parra-Morrow (22in. x 28in.)
     
    Artwork purchased online can be picked up AFTER the exhibit ends, on or after August 2, 2026 -- or shipped to the buyer (ALL SHIPPING COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE BUYER). 
    $1,776.00 Buy now
  • I Am

    I Am

    Oil by Weldon Ryan (36in. x 48in.)
    "When in the course of human events a person has to stand up against oppression and make a statement so that others acknowledge the wrongs of our society."
    Artwork purchased online can be picked up AFTER the exhibit ends, on or after August 2, 2026 -- or shipped to the buyer (ALL SHIPPING COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE BUYER). 
    $3,500.00 Buy now
  • Not America

    Not America

    Mixed Media by Richlin Burnett-Ryan (30in. x 40in.)
     
    Artwork purchased online can be picked up AFTER the exhibit ends, on or after August 2, 2026 -- or shipped to the buyer (ALL SHIPPING COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE BUYER). 
    $3,500.00 Buy now
  • Out of stock Standard Bearer 1861

    Standard Bearer 1861

    Acrylic by Jason Mosley (11in. x 9in.)
     
    Artwork purchased online can be picked up AFTER the exhibit ends, on or after August 2, 2026 -- or shipped to the buyer (ALL SHIPPING COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE BUYER). 
    $150.00 Read more
  • Where My Heart Lives

    Where My Heart Lives

    Oil on Canvas by Helen Curran (30in. x 40in.) ***Not for Sale***
    "This painting is a reflection of my deep appreciation for the country I call home. The flowing folds of the American flag are intentionally abstracted, representing not only a symbol, but also the many stories. hopes, and dreams woven into its fabric. I'm proud to be an American. For me, the flag embodies resilience, opportunity, and the freedom to pursue a life filled with purpose and possibility. Its movement across the canvas suggests a living, evolving nation––one shaped by generations who have contributed to its story while looking toward the future."
    Artwork purchased online can be picked up AFTER the exhibit ends, on or after August 2, 2026 -- or shipped to the buyer (ALL SHIPPING COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE BUYER). 
    Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
  • The Couch Potato's Preamble

    The Couch Potato’s Preamble

    Acrylic by Veronica Haddock (24in. x 216in.)
    "When chooing not to vote, a voter is making a vote. The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that 174 million people were registered to vote in the 2024 presidential election. Of those, 154 million people (65.3%) voted. This means about 20 million registered voters did not vote–roughly 11.5% of registered electorate. A post-election survey found that 59% of registered voters reported voting, while 41% did not. When individuals choose not to vote, they are contributing to a lower overall voter turnout. If many people abstain from voting, the remaining votes can disproportionately favor one candidate over another, which may result in a less qualified candidate winning."
    Artwork purchased online can be picked up AFTER the exhibit ends, on or after August 2, 2026 -- or shipped to the buyer (ALL SHIPPING COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE BUYER). 
    $395.00 Buy now
  • The Promise

    The Promise

    Multimedia by Laura Dill (19in. x 22.25in.)
    "I keep asking myself: how close are we? Not in the abstract, policy-paper way, but the way you feel it at 3 AM when you can’t sleep; the heaviness in your chest when you read the news and think: We could lose it all. The vote. The hope of equality. The country itself. I have spent my life living the distance between the promise on the page and the reality in the room, being dismissed, talked over, and passed over. I have lived from the beginning of Roe to its deliberate end. I know what it means when a promise dissolves. So I went back to the document where the promise began. I spent weeks researching the voices the Declaration left out. Abigail Adams, writing to John Adams in 1776, before the ink was even dry, imploring him to remember the ladies; the women at Seneca Falls in 1848 who had to argue, formally, in a resolution, that they were equal to men as their creator intended. I included the Constitution and the 19th Amendment, which granted women the vote 144 years after Abigail’s plea. I printed each voice on parchment to match the Declaration, layering them onto it, not beside it, but over it, because that is where they belong. They always belonged there. At the bottom of the piece, one more layer. The SAVE Act, 2026. A bill already passed by the House, and moving through the Senate now, would make it fundamentally harder for Americans, and disproportionately women, to prove they have the right to vote. The argument isn’t over. It never was. Our democracy is the longest experiment in self-governance the world has ever attempted. It is also fragile in ways we do not reckon with until something cracks. It is grounded not in stone, but in norms, in honor, in what Abigail might have called better angels whispering in leaders’ ears. She whispered. They didn’t listen. But she wasn’t the last to try. And neither am I. Neither are you. “The Promise” is not a eulogy. It is a reminder that this fight has been handed down, woman to woman, generation to generation, for 250 years, and that it is now in our hands. The question the piece asks is simply this: What will you do with it?"
    Artwork purchased online can be picked up AFTER the exhibit ends, on or after August 2, 2026 -- or shipped to the buyer (ALL SHIPPING COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE BUYER). 
    $350.00 Buy now